Originally posted by Charles_22:
Nikademus:
. I hope I'm making sense here.
[ December 18, 2001: Message edited by: Charles_22 ]
naw...i think you might have been caught inside a turret ring after a high velocity round skipped off, the effect would probably be similar to turning up the stereo sounds of SP:WAW to full blast on a full computer speaker system and scoring a glancing hit on a tank
WWWWWWWWHHHHHHHHHHOOOOOOOOOOOONNNNNNNNNNGGGG!!!!!!!
<img src="tongue.gif" border="0">
I see what your saying about the T-34, though i still must disagree. For one, the Pz-IV example you cited, while the gun "size" did indeed stay the same still recieved what was essentially a completely new gun, one purpose built to defeat heavy enemy tank armor wheras the previous KwK had been express designed for close support of infantry with but a nominal anti tank capability added in.
That and the uparmoring completely changed the tank's role in the scheme of things as well,
The reason of course, was to make the tank competetive once again in an increasingly scary world.
I see no difference in the case of the T-34. True, the hull was not uparmored, but the turret mantlet was so there was a nominal increase in protection. It could be aruged that there would also be a "nominal" increase in protection via the bigger gun allowing the tank to fight at longer combat ranges where it would have a better chance of surviving a hit vs having to close to 100-200yards!!!
Remember too, that the decision not to uparmor the hull of the 34 was a **conciencious** one made by the Russian command because they felt that preserving the 34's mobility and range was more important than the potentially dubious benefits one might recieve from say, doubling the armor of the 34 as in the case of the later T-44 (and i cant blame them in the face of such uber-AT weapons like like the 75L70, 88L56 and 88L71....even the APCR boosted 75L48 could fall into this)
So the Russians could have fully uparmored the T-34 but chose not too. The decision to increase the gun size by comparison was one of little choice. The Russians could'nt really compete in the technical high velocity dept like the Germans so needed a bigger gun to get the bigger kick. Being very much production minded they also had an easy fix in the form of an existing gun to use as a template to build a better dedicated AT gun (85mm AA)
As for the T-34 being an answer to the Tiger specifically....i'm sure that was part of it, but especially in light of the revelations of V.70 based on new data from the RMZ and Lorrin's book, the Tiger was hardly the only AFV giving the T-34 problems....even the ubiquious Pz-IV, facelifted and revitalized with 80mm glasis and a high velocity gun was now more than a match in a gunfight at the OK corral vs the T-34 which either would need APCR ammo (and a good gunner) or get a flank shot. (the undesirable alternative would be to close to under 100M head on and pray for continual German misses)
Finally, the 34/85 was'nt simply an upgunned tank but was further improved by eliminating what had been arguably the vehicle's greatest fobile even from the days of it's uber-ness....getting a roomy three man turret and improved optics making it better able to take advantage of the improved gun at obtain that "longer arm to reach out and smash German armor"
Ok, so the tank remained vulnerable to the majority of German AT weapons. Join the club i say, Sherman, Churchill, Cromwell, even Pershing. All could be peirced at standard battle ranges more or less. It was a sad reality of facing an enemy that held the high spot in AT technology in terms of killing tanks at least. The RMZ made a good point in pointing out that a tank is hardly just a tool to fight tanks, but more often fights other targets making HE just as important.
Given the results of the Russian offensives from 44-45, i would again, hardly call the 34/85 a stop gap, but rather, like the metamorphasis of the Mark IV, a final refinement of one the best tank designs of WWII and arguably the best overall when looking at the big picture and not just stats
The KV-85. To reclarify, reason i call it a stopgap was because long before it, the Russians realized the folly of equiping both their Heavy and Medium tanks with the same gun. What point in having two types? esp in the face of such formidable AT weapons? Thicker armor serves little if you cant stand off and smash your enemy, one of the secrets of the Tiger....its armor by late 43-44 was hardly uber in terms of thickness, other tanks had it or exceeded it, but it's gun and optics allowed it to engage enemies from distances that made it's armor more than good enough and made the enemy's fire virutally impotent. Further, the KV-85's marginal armor improvements (more important for a heavy tank than a medium) hardly justified it's existance when there were cheaper SU-85 and T-34/85 coming into the fold
The Russians realized this which is why the KV-85 had a very short run to bridge the gap between the discontinued KV series and it's sucessor, the IS series. Thats my definition of 'stop gap'
It served it's purpose and then the IS came along with improved balistic shape, thicker armor (except for the turret unfort) and most importantly, a BIIIIIIG gun, capable of dealing with most any opponent, giving the Soviets an idea heavy breakthrough tank. Not perfect, but better than any KV. (i should add "eventually" in the case of the gun....85mm to 100mm to 122mm in short sucession)
[ December 18, 2001: Message edited by: Nikademus ]</p>